That’s gotta be a stiff ride at 47-49 psi.47psi cold. Driving they warm up to 49psi this time of year.
I love the feel what a difference in turning, handedly, rolls way better, better range I found to.
This is a very heavy truck!
Stand on the side of the wheel and look at the bottom contact of the wheel and look at the sage of the tire! It will tell you right away that you need more air for this beast of a truck nearing 7,000lbs.
The dealer gave me the truck at 36 lb and it's was awful I almost hit a Highway divider when I had to do a quick maneuver, tires are way too soft at 36lbs, what are they thinking? At 47 lbs it's a world of difference and much safer I find to. Haven't noticed any loss of traction at 47 lb this truck weighs so much you going to have a lot of traction either way. I'm going to try 49lbs cold soon, this truck is so heavy you need to max out tire pressure especially on these stock tires. I'm going to be looking for new tires for this truck soon and look into ones with Max 81 psi. I have a Ford E250 Cargo Van and it has 81 psi max tires on it! Got to get better tires on the lightning than the stock ones...
Pulled up at my tire shop and there it was right on top. They fixed it in the street faster than I could go inside and pay. I had the guy save the screw so I could see if it was friendly fire or not. Not.Not at all, when I set my stock AS to 42 cold, they often rise to 44-45 after spirited driving.
Pay attention to the one that went low, might have a nail hiding in the tread
Are you leaving out the screws?Keep an eye on that tire. One tire going that low, compared to the other 3, points to a nail in it.
Are you leaving out the screws?
I’ve Far more screws than nails.
This thread brings to mind 2 things: 1) That iconic Life magazine pic of the father and son who over-inflated their tractor tire and it exploded (taking them with it) and 2) Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas where Hunter S. Thompson convinces the gas station attendant that the tires on the Cadillac are new/experimental technology and to please fill them to a ridiculously high psi.I just topped off my four to 50... ready for a 300 mile trip tomorrow. The ride home from the tire shop was NICE and COMFORTABLE and SMOOTH... I felt NO difference one way or the other, before at 39, or now at 50. The Michelin Primacy XC tires state '51 max psi'... The truck does NOT know what tire, or what type or size tire you have, so I don't know why going by the 'door sticker' would be the 'rule'...
The low pressure setpoint is set to whatever tire you had on the truck when delivered. That is why its recommended to set pressure by the door sticker.I just topped off my four to 50... ready for a 300 mile trip tomorrow. The ride home from the tire shop was NICE and COMFORTABLE and SMOOTH... I felt NO difference one way or the other, before at 39, or now at 50. The Michelin Primacy XC tires state '51 max psi'... The truck does NOT know what tire, or what type or size tire you have, so I don't know why going by the 'door sticker' would be the 'rule'...
There are a lot of benefits to more air pressure but one of the downsides is more weight needs more stopping power in emergencies. And that means larger contact patch (less pressure).It will tell you right away that you need more air for this beast of a truck nearing 7,000lbs.
There are a lot of benefits to more air pressure but one of the downsides is more weight needs more stopping power in emergencies. And that means larger contact patch (less pressure).